Managing Commercial, Public, Utility and Telecom Fleets
L&MT MAGAZINE
Subscribe
Renew
Contact Us
Customer Service
Letters to the Editor
Advertising
Reprints
List Rental
INDUSTRY RANKINGS
LMT Top 100
Top 50 Utility &
Telecom Fleets
TRANSPORT TOPICS
TT Online
TT Buyer's Guide
TT 100
TT Logistics 50
Webinar Archive
Note: Reprinting or reproducing any article or parts of an article without permission of American Trucking Associations is strictly prohibited.
 Updated:

Lawmakers Seek Resolution of Mexican Trucks Dispute

A group of 56 U.S. lawmakers have urged the Obama administration to resolve a dispute with Mexico over cross-border trucking that has damaged bilateral trade, Reuters reported.


The current situation is “unsustainable and untenable,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter sent to U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, Reuters said.


“Our constituents need help immediately and we implore you to work quickly to implement a solution that ensures safety and normalizes trade,” the letter stated. “Please communicate your plans for a solution so we are better able to understand the administration’s strategy.”


Mexican trucks are allowed to operate within about 25 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border, and under the Bush administration DOT began pilot program in 2007 to allow some Mexican carriers free access to all U.S. roads.


The Obama administration suspended the program a year ago in March 2009, and a group of Mexican carriers subsequently threatened to sue the U.S. for $6 billion for violating the 1993 North American Free Trade Agreement.


Kirk said last month in Mexico City that the two countries need to resolve the dispute as soon as possible.

(Click here for previous coverage.)

More Headlines from Transport Topics Online

CVG Sets Mexican Facility to Supply Daimler Plants

Transportation Activity Shows Improvement, Fed Says

Navistar’s Fiscal 3Q Income Rises

YRC Plans Appeal to Avoid Nasdaq Delisting

China’s 2010 Heavy-Duty Truck Sales May Top 1 Million

Diesel Dips 0.7 Cent to $2.931 a Gallon

 Click for more...

ADVERTISEMENTS

 
© American Trucking Associations, Inc., All Rights Reserved